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Where the Bird Flu Got Its Infamous Start

The bird flu has technically been around for a very long time in aquatic bird species; however, the first H5N1 outbreak was first seen in geese in China in 1996.

Avian influenza is an infectious disease of birds caused by a type A strain of the influenza virus. Most species of wild birds that carry this disease show no apparent signs of infection or harm. This disease occurs worldwide, and other bird species, including domestic poultry, develop disease when infected with avian influenza virus.

These influenza viruses are usually species-specific, which means that viruses that infect an individual species stick to that species. Since 1959, instances of human infection with an avian influenza virus have been only documented on 10 occasions.

The first documented outbreak among humans infected with H5N1 occurred in Hong Kong in 1997. There were 18 human cases, which coincided with an outbreak of highly pathogenic avian influenza, caused by an identical virus, in poultry farms and live markets. The source of infection was determined by extensive studies of the human cases to be the direct contact with diseased poultry. Studies carried out in family members, and social contacts of patients, health workers engaged in their care, and poultry cullers found that there was very limited, if any human to human transmission. Hong Kongs entire poultry population was immediately destroyed and within three days, human infections ceased. The destruction of almost 1.5 million birds has some experts believing that the drastic action may have averted an influenza pandemic.

The principal source of human infection with the H5N1 virus is shown by all evidence to date to be close contact with dead or sick birds. Particularly risky behaviors for risk of infection include slaughtering, defeathering, butchering, and preparation for consumption of infected birds. Children playing in an area frequented by free-ranging poultry, and exposure to the chickens feces, are thought to have been the source of infection in a few cases. Another possible source of infection is swimming in water bodies where the carcasses of dead infected birds have been discarded or which may have been contaminated by feces from infected animals.

In some cases, investigators have not been able to identify the exposure source, which suggests that there may be some as yet unknown environmental factor that could involve contamination with the deadly virus.

The flu virus can be found in nature with several types of wild aquatic birds and has persisted in these animals for millions of years. The virus does not typically cause illness, however the flu viruses that frequently mutate can easily jump the species barrier from these wild birds to domestic ducks and then chickens. Pigs can then be infected with the avian influenza and the form that infects the human population. If humans and pigs live together in close proximity, then a mutation can occur when a pig is infected with the avian and human flu resulting in a virus whose genes have been resorted and can now spread from pigs to humans. Depending on the precise assortment of bird flu proteins that make it into the human population, the resulting flu may be more or less severe.

In 1997 it was discovered by scientists that the bird influenza skipped the step where it would have to infect a pig, and went directly to infecting humans. This alarmed health officials to think that a pandemic was possible. Fortunately at that time the virus was not able to pass between people, and therefore did not cause an outbreak. Scientists are now speculating that chickens may be able to contract these human type viruses and cause the same problem.

The infamous type A avian influenza virus got its start in nature, but through the continuous mutation of the virus, coupled with the new forms of human infection methods, the bird flu has become a much more serious illness than when it first got its start.

Latest News About Bird Flu:

Novavax Pandemic Flu Vaccine Provided Protection Against A Lethal Challenge Of Live Virus, Pre-Clinical Data Show

Very low doses of Novavax Inc.'s pandemic influenza vaccine provided protection against a lethal challenge of live H5N1 viruses, according to pre-clinical data presented here today at the Second International Conference on Avian Influenza in Humans. The data show that two 0.6 microgram doses of Novavax's virus-like particle (VLP) H5N1 vaccine -- without the addition of an adjuvant -- protected ferrets from challenges with live H5N1 bird flu viruses. [click link for full article]

Antibodies From Deadly Avian Flu Survivors Could Give Immunity To Others

An international team of scientists has shown that specific antibodies taken from the blood of Vietnamese survivors of the deadly strain of H5N1 avian flu can be reproduced in the laboratory and used to neutralize the virus in a test tube and in mice, suggesting that it could also be a way to confer immunity to humans before and shortly after becoming infected.The findings are published in the open access journal PLoS Medicine. [click link for full article]

GlaxoSmithKline To Make Unprecedented Vaccine Donation To WHO Pandemic Flu Stockpile

GlaxoSmithKline (NYSE: GSK) today announced its intention to donate 50 million doses of H5N1 adjuvanted pre-pandemic influenza vaccine to the World Health Organization (WHO) in support of its stockpile initiative. The donation will help establish a much needed stockpile of pre-pandemic vaccines that can be distributed to the world's poorest countries at short notice by the WHO. [click link for full article]

Monoclonal Neutralizing Antibodies Show Promise Against Avian Flu

Starting with blood of patients who survived a bout of avian flu (infection with the H5N1 strain), Cameron Simmons (of the Oxford University Clinical Research Unit at the Hospital for Tropical Diseases in Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam) and colleagues generated neutralizing human monoclonal antibodies and show that they can halt viral growth in mice deliberately infected with H5N1 virus. [click link for full article]

Baxter Supports Improved Access To Pandemic Influenza Treatment In The Developing World

Baxter International Inc. (NYSE: BAX) expressed its continued support of the World Health Organization's (WHO) pandemic planning programs through participation in a planned international stockpile program. [click link for full article]

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